Bloomberg
China is churning out robots.
Annual production of industrial robots surpassed 100,000 for
the first time — and it only took
10 months.
Shipments were up 67 percent through October compared with a year earlier, state media reported. And there’s more to come: full-year output will reach 120,000 units, according to Ministry of Industry and Information Technology forecasts.
China produced about 90,000 robot units in 2016, more than South Korea and North America combined, data compiled by Bloomberg from the International Federation of Robotics show.
China accounts for about a third of the global demand for industrial robots, which are at the core of the government’s sweeping “Made in China 2025†plan to upgrade factories to be highly automated and technologically-advanced.
In 2015, foreign manufacturers comprised about two-thirds of China’s output, according to the IFR. That proportion is narrowing as Chinese companies such as Midea Group Ltd. and Siasun Robot & Automation Co. expand into the sector.
Midea purchased Germany’s
Kuka AG in 2016 and Siasun opened a $300 million industrial park in
October near its headquarters
in Shenyang.